--- name: google-workspace description: Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Contacts, Sheets, and Docs integration for Hermes. Uses Hermes-managed OAuth2 setup, prefers the Google Workspace CLI (`gws`) when available for broader API coverage, and falls back to the Python client libraries otherwise. version: 1.0.0 author: Nous Research license: MIT metadata: hermes: tags: [Google, Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Sheets, Docs, Contacts, Email, OAuth] homepage: https://github.com/NousResearch/hermes-agent related_skills: [himalaya] --- # Google Workspace Gmail, Calendar, Drive, Contacts, Sheets, and Docs — through Hermes-managed OAuth and a thin CLI wrapper. When `gws` is installed, the skill uses it as the execution backend for broader Google Workspace coverage; otherwise it falls back to the bundled Python client implementation. ## References - `references/gmail-search-syntax.md` — Gmail search operators (is:unread, from:, newer_than:, etc.) ## Scripts - `scripts/setup.py` — OAuth2 setup (run once to authorize) - `scripts/google_api.py` — compatibility wrapper CLI. It prefers `gws` for operations when available, while preserving Hermes' existing JSON output contract. ## First-Time Setup The setup is fully non-interactive — you drive it step by step so it works on CLI, Telegram, Discord, or any platform. Define a shorthand first: ```bash GSETUP="python ${HERMES_HOME:-$HOME/.hermes}/skills/productivity/google-workspace/scripts/setup.py" ``` ### Step 0: Check if already set up ```bash $GSETUP --check ``` If it prints `AUTHENTICATED`, skip to Usage — setup is already done. ### Step 1: Triage — ask the user what they need Before starting OAuth setup, ask the user TWO questions: **Question 1: "What Google services do you need? Just email, or also Calendar/Drive/Sheets/Docs?"** - **Email only** → They don't need this skill at all. Use the `himalaya` skill instead — it works with a Gmail App Password (Settings → Security → App Passwords) and takes 2 minutes to set up. No Google Cloud project needed. Load the himalaya skill and follow its setup instructions. - **Email + Calendar** → Continue with this skill, but use `--services email,calendar` during auth so the consent screen only asks for the scopes they actually need. - **Calendar/Drive/Sheets/Docs only** → Continue with this skill and use a narrower `--services` set like `calendar,drive,sheets,docs`. - **Full Workspace access** → Continue with this skill and use the default `all` service set. **Question 2: "Does your Google account use Advanced Protection (hardware security keys required to sign in)? If you're not sure, you probably don't — it's something you would have explicitly enrolled in."** - **No / Not sure** → Normal setup. Continue below. - **Yes** → Their Workspace admin must add the OAuth client ID to the org's allowed apps list before Step 4 will work. Let them know upfront. ### Step 2: Create OAuth credentials (one-time, ~5 minutes) Tell the user: > You need a Google Cloud OAuth client. This is a one-time setup: > > 1. Create or select a project: > https://console.cloud.google.com/projectselector2/home/dashboard > 2. Enable the required APIs from the API Library: > https://console.cloud.google.com/apis/library > Enable: Gmail API, Google Calendar API, Google Drive API, > Google Sheets API, Google Docs API, People API > 3. Create the OAuth client here: > https://console.cloud.google.com/apis/credentials > Credentials → Create Credentials → OAuth 2.0 Client ID > 4. Application type: "Desktop app" → Create > 5. If the app is still in Testing, add the user's Google account as a test user here: > https://console.cloud.google.com/auth/audience > Audience → Test users → Add users > 6. Download the JSON file and tell me the file path > > Important Hermes CLI note: if the file path starts with `/`, do NOT send only the bare path as its own message in the CLI, because it can be mistaken for a slash command. Send it in a sentence instead, like: > `The JSON file path is: /home/user/Downloads/client_secret_....json` Once they provide the path: ```bash $GSETUP --client-secret /path/to/client_secret.json ``` If they paste the raw client ID / client secret values instead of a file path, write a valid Desktop OAuth JSON file for them yourself, save it somewhere explicit (for example `~/Downloads/hermes-google-client-secret.json`), then run `--client-secret` against that file. ### Step 3: Get authorization URL Use the service set chosen in Step 1. Examples: ```bash $GSETUP --auth-url --services email,calendar --format json $GSETUP --auth-url --services calendar,drive,sheets,docs --format json $GSETUP --auth-url --services all --format json ``` This returns JSON with an `auth_url` field and also saves the exact URL to `~/.hermes/google_oauth_last_url.txt`. Agent rules for this step: - Extract the `auth_url` field and send that exact URL to the user as a single line. - Tell the user that the browser will likely fail on `http://localhost:1` after approval, and that this is expected. - Tell them to copy the ENTIRE redirected URL from the browser address bar. - If the user gets `Error 403: access_denied`, send them directly to `https://console.cloud.google.com/auth/audience` to add themselves as a test user. ### Step 4: Exchange the code The user will paste back either a URL like `http://localhost:1/?code=4/0A...&scope=...` or just the code string. Either works. The `--auth-url` step stores a temporary pending OAuth session locally so `--auth-code` can complete the PKCE exchange later, even on headless systems: ```bash $GSETUP --auth-code "THE_URL_OR_CODE_THE_USER_PASTED" --format json ``` If `--auth-code` fails because the code expired, was already used, or came from an older browser tab, it now returns a fresh `fresh_auth_url`. In that case, immediately send the new URL to the user and have them retry with the newest browser redirect only. ### Step 5: Verify ```bash $GSETUP --check ``` Should print `AUTHENTICATED`. Setup is complete — token refreshes automatically from now on. ### Notes - Token is stored at `~/.hermes/google_token.json` and auto-refreshes. - Pending OAuth session state/verifier are stored temporarily at `~/.hermes/google_oauth_pending.json` until exchange completes. - If `gws` is installed, `google_api.py` points it at the same `~/.hermes/google_token.json` credentials file. Users do not need to run a separate `gws auth login` flow. - To revoke: `$GSETUP --revoke` ## Usage All commands go through the API script. Set `GAPI` as a shorthand: ```bash GAPI="python ${HERMES_HOME:-$HOME/.hermes}/skills/productivity/google-workspace/scripts/google_api.py" ``` ### Gmail ```bash # Search (returns JSON array with id, from, subject, date, snippet) $GAPI gmail search "is:unread" --max 10 $GAPI gmail search "from:boss@company.com newer_than:1d" $GAPI gmail search "has:attachment filename:pdf newer_than:7d" # Read full message (returns JSON with body text) $GAPI gmail get MESSAGE_ID # Send $GAPI gmail send --to user@example.com --subject "Hello" --body "Message text" $GAPI gmail send --to user@example.com --subject "Report" --body "
Details...
" --html $GAPI gmail send --to user@example.com --subject "Hello" --from '"Research Agent"